Off duty, Yor is a black-and-ivory column with gold at the hair and exactly one red accent — elegant, composed, a little too precise for a city hall clerk. That's the whole translation: black and ivory carry the volume, gold stays small and structural, and red appears once per outfit, no more. If it looks like something a very calm, very punctual woman would wear, it's working.
fig. 00 — the source materialCasual cosplay for work — she's the archetype; this is literally what she wears to the office. Ivory blouse, black skirt, gold in the hair, one red accent. Your coworkers see a very put-together person. That's the joke.
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⑤The whole look hinges on hair up: twist it back and let the gold pin show — worn down, this is just office clothes. Keep everything matte black and ivory so the lipstick is the only red in frame; if a full red lip is too loud for your office, red nails do the same job at lower volume. Blouse tucked, always. She would never half-tuck.
Total as shown: ~$146, or ~$102 without the flats.
fig. 01 — the office-safe version
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⑤That's the point. Every Yor Forger look here is built from regular clothing — the subtle version reads as a good outfit to anyone who doesn't watch Spy×Family, and a knowing nod to anyone who does.
No — and that's a house rule. Nothing replica, nothing costume-grade. If an item would look strange at a coffee shop, it doesn't make the page.
Straight to the retailer — real shops, real prices, checked by a person. When a link dies, we swap in the backup and re-check the date you see on the card.